Spyke
lemmy.one

I had this comic book, it was a special edition sold at Radio Shack when I was a kid. And yeah that pocket computer was just a big calculator that had a lot of keys.

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ludreply
lemm.ee

Or rather it was a pocket compute-er. It's very primitive compared to a modern computer but it's still a computer.

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xthexderreply
l.sw0.com

The first computers took up entire rooms and they could only do about as much as a calculator. There was a point in time that having a computer do multiplication and long division for you saved you hours of time because the alternative was have 2 or 3 people do it by hand and then compare to check for mistakes.

Some of the code cracking computers used for breaking war-time ciphers were state of the art, and their only job was to check as many combinations as possible, way faster than any human could. Which left the actual scientists to find optimizations and analyze any results.

8
ludreply

Yes exactly.

Many years ago you could even have a job as a (human) computer. You pretty much computed/calculated stuff all day.

5

Me too! Wow that takes me back. Wonder if it's still floating around mom's house.

Just looked at eBay, seems there were a few.

3
midwest.social

I always think it's funny when Superman actually learns Kryptonian science and then doesn't share it with anyone.

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barsquidreply
lemmy.world

Krypton is more like Alabama than we could have guessed.

5

I'm imagining Superman's Krptonian family all arriving via their space pods to a family reunion where they, and the holograms of their parents, geek out over 80's human tech.

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lemm.ee

Oh, "the late twentieth century" as someone said to me recently? It was eons ago.

8
midwest.social

The stamp in the top right is the entire removable motherboard. I put my cardputer on a shelf when it got here and I haven’t gotten around to it yet. M5 stack is pretty cool, and I wish I understood it more.

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hate2bmereply
lemmy.world

It was actually a joke but is it an actual usable computer? What can it do?

1

I think it’s mostly for prototyping your own programs, which I haven’t tried yet. It comes with a wifi ssid snooper, and a like greeting card voice recorder/replayer. It’s credit card size, half inch thick. The back half is a removable battery expansion. The stamp has a usb c for data/charging. There’s WiFi, infrared blaster, sd card slot, expansion ports for other sensors. It’s nifty for sure, maybe someday I’ll find a use for it too.

2

I had one of these in grade nine! An uncle gifted me this calculator in my first year of high school. I was smart ... but not smart enough to know how use one of these or to realize that it might be a thing to keep. I used it for a year and it promptly disappeared after that.

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He uses it once ... then crushes it with his hands into a small diamond that he drops into his belt later.

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In the comics they are always stealing things from the news stand and stashing it there. It's Superman's 2nd greatest weakness.

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Yeah, they've featured them in a number of comics. I don't recall if it had ever been featured in any other media.

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The 8-Bit Guy has a nice video covering the functionality of a number of such devices. They're fascinating bits of kit -- they're like calculators you can type BASIC programs into. One of them can even be hooked up to a pen plotter to make graphs on paper -- it can even graph in 3D!

7

Tandy slapped the TRS-80 label on a lot of things that had nothing to do with the original TRS-80 design. The Color Computer line was marketed under that brand, for instance, despite being a completely different, incompatible architecture.

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Most folks don't know that all the Tandy's computers utilized a liquid quantum substrate as their processors.

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